A former jail deputy for the Marion County sheriff’s office, accused of using a food stamp card issued to an inmate, is facing welfare fraud, forgery, theft and official misconduct charges .

Tonya Bradley, 39, told detectives the inmate’s boyfriend gave her the card and told her she could use it as much as she wanted. In exchange, she would put $210 in the inmate’s commissary account, according to a probable cause affidavit.

Bradley, who was employed by the sheriff’s office for 14 years, told police she gave the inmate’s Electronic Benefit Transfer, or EBT card, to her mother to buy food for her sister’s children, according to documents.

The EBT card was issued to Lisa Douglas last June. She had been arrested for criminal confinement, battery with serious bodily injury and being a habitual offender, documents said.

Records show that about $940 worth of groceries were bought using Douglas’ card. Investigators found that Bradley deposited money to Douglas’ account using the commissary kiosk at the jail three times and used different depositor names on each occasion, documents said.

Bradley initially told detectives that her sister, who was friends with Douglas, had the food stamp card for a few weeks and was likely using it, documents said.

Bradley has been charged with one count of welfare fraud, six counts of forgery, one count of official misconduct and one count of theft.

She’s one of two jail deputies fired this month for alleged misconduct. The other deputy, Marceline Daniel-Estil, a nine-year veteran of the sheriff’s office, is accused of lying about selling an inmate’s car.